Commerce Trust Co. v. Keck

223 S.W. 1057, 283 Mo. 209, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 19, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 1057 (Commerce Trust Co. v. Keck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commerce Trust Co. v. Keck, 223 S.W. 1057, 283 Mo. 209, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 240 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

The petition in this- case is in seven counts of similar tenor on as many special tax hills, issued against lots belonging to the defendants for the cost of grading Main Street, from Twenty-third Street on the north to Grand Avenue on the south. The taxed lots are numbered 28, 29, 80, 31 and 32, in Corrected Plat of City View Park, an addition to Kansas City, lying south of. the south line of Twenty-fourth Street, and two other lots described by metes and bounds in the same addition. One of the last mentioned lots was made by vacating an alley ten feet wide, and as thus formed, it fronts on the east side of Main Street and extends for one hundred and twenty feet along the rear ends of the numbered lots which front on Twenty-fourth Street. The other lot described by metes and bounds lies south of the alley lot and faces the east side of Main Street for a width not given, but indicated on the map in the record to be from thirteen to fifteen feet, and the depth to be one hundred and thirty-five feet. The location of those parcels of land is shown on the sketch map which goes with this statement, but is not a copy of the record map. Together the lots comprise a tract nearly square, at the southeast corner of Twenty-fourth and Main Streets, the whole of it lying south of Twenty-fourth Street. The numbers of the tax bills in suit and declared on in the different counts of the petition are: In the first count Bill No. 144, against Lot No. 28, for the amount of $1259.58; in the second count, Bill No. 145, against Lot No. 29, for the amount of $1259.58; in the third 'count, Bill No. 146, against Lot No. 30, for $1102.13; in the fourth couht, Bill No. 147, against Lot No. 31, for $1102.13; in the fifth count, Bill No. 148, against Lot No. 32, for $925.66; in the sixth count, Bill No. 149, against the said alley lot for $143.02; in count 7, Bill No. 150, against the second tract described by metes and bounds, for $392.96; all of said tax bills bearing the date, October 21, 1913.

*216 The main defendant is the Plaza Leasehold & Investment Company, a corporation, hereafter referred to as the Plaza Company. The other defendants are Mary Keck, Louise Marold, Amelia Rollert, Frederick Keck, D. M. Allen, G. H. Davis, Hugh F. Tighe and James 0. Griggs. The different interests of the various defendants are nowhere shown in the record; but in the joint answer filed by all the defendants except the Plaza Company, they say they own or claim some interest in the real estate described in the different counts, and then adopt the answer and cross-petition of the Plaza Company. Said company was the conceded owner of the aforesaid lots when this action was begun. The answer and cross-petition of the Plaza Company set up eleven distinct defenses in as many paragraphs;- but only four of them have been renewed on this appeal and, therefore, no attention will be paid to the' others.

The first defense urged here is that substantial quantities of land, both in respect of areas and values, were omitted, which the Charter of Kansas City required to be included in the taxation or benefit district established to contain the tracts of land that should bear the burden of grading Main Street. The tracts alleged to have been improperly omitted are indicated on the sketch map by the capital letters A, B and C. The irregular heavy line shown on the map is the boundary of the assessment district, and runs from the slanting north line of Grand Avenue on the south to the south line of Twenty-third Street on the north.

Omitted Tract A will be obseryed to run north from the slanting north line of Plaza Road to Twenty-third Street, and to embrace the rear half of the lots abutting on the east line of Main Street (which are bisected by the line of the assessment district), and also a parallelogram of the same width to the east. All of the land abutting on the east side of Main Street, between Plaza Road and Twenty-third Street, is laid off into lots. One half of the depth of these lots, or 54.78 feet, is included in the assessment district; but the east half of said lots is excluded. The alleged omitted feet, is included in the assessment district; but the *217 east half of said lots is excluded. The alleged omitted Tract A, contains said excluded east half of the lots, and a piece equally wide (54.78') still further east and defined on the east by the heavy fine shown on the map, marked at the ends D and E. The contention of the defendants is that the ground from Main Street on the west, to Westport Boad on the east, and from Twenty-third Street on the north to Twenty-fourth Street on the south, constitutes a block within the meaning of the city charter, and according to the charter the assessment district should have been carried east from Main Street to the middle of that block.

The plaintiff contends that as the ground lying east of Main Street had been platted into lots, the charter required the line of the assessment district to bisect the lots; that is, run 54.78 feet .east of Main Street.

If defendants are right, a tract in the form of an irregular parallelogram more than one, hundred and nine feet in width and more than three hundred feet long on its west line and something less on its east side (the exact dimensions are nowhere given in the record or on the plat filed with it) should have been embraced in the assessment district.

The second parcel of land asserted to have been omitted is designated by the letter WB” on the accompanying map, and consists of the west or rear half of part of Lot 5 and all of the west-half of Lots 6, 7, and 8, of the Corrected Plat of City View Park Addition. Those lots abut on the west side of Main Street and are assessed back from Main a depth of fifty-five feet, are about one hundred and ten feet deep and all the omitted portion is a parallelogram approximately fifty-five feet east and west by a longer distance north and south. It is impossible to ascertain from the record the exact dimensions of the parcel, as no figures are given.

The contention of defendants regarding this omitted tract is, that Baltimore Avenue and Main Street form the east and west boundaries of a block, and Twenty-third Street on the north and City View Avenue, plus the west part of Twenty-fifth Street (there being a jog in the Street), form the north and south *218 boundaries of a block; that tbe lots on tbe east side of said block, and abutting on the west side of Main Street, run back to the north-and-south line ■ bisecting said block and, therefore, by the charter, the assessment line should have been carried back to said bisecting line, to-wit, to the west line of said Lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, instead of being drawn along the middle line of said lots.

The position of plaintiff is that as the land to the .west of said Lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, to Baltimore Avenue, is not laid off into lots, the'charter required the line of the assessment district to bisect the lots.

The third tract wrongly omitted, so defendants say, is designated by the letter 0, and the same reasons are assigned pro and con, why said parcel should have been included in the district, and why it should have been omitted, that are assigned by the respective parties regarding Tract B.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 1057, 283 Mo. 209, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commerce-trust-co-v-keck-mo-1920.